Gbosaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!!!Thank God for you a jare my brother.That Chief Tola Adeniyi is a brown envelope journalist is well known by all and sundry. That he was an apologist to OGD is no news. That he is still doing boy boy to OGD at his old age is not something people are not unaware of. This same Tola Adeniyi who used the his Till Death Do us part column in the Nigerian Tribune to deceive Nigerians only to become errand boy for IBB in the movement to Abuja scandal, and later Abacha is not lost on Nigerians.One would have thought that people like Chief Tola Adeniyi aka Deto Deni would have gained some wisdom now that he is above seventy years.
From: Iyke Ajitona <ajito...@yahoo.com>
To: "Omo...@yahoogroups.com" <Omo...@yahoogroups.com>; NIgerianW...@yahoogroups.com; NaijaP...@yahoogroups.com
Cc: "adead...@yahoo.com" <adead...@yahoo.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2013 1:10:16 AM
Subject: [NIgerianWorldForum] Re: [OmoOdua] TOLA ADENIYI ON ACHEBE!!!
Alagba,Oh, yes, atanpako in ju'we ookan; we sure know the disguised object of Adeniyi's vitriol, bushy hair, and all. But Adeniyi represents to me the character in one Hausa adage that goes: "He who calls his wife a prostitute must not be surprised when his children are called bastards." Adeniyi, himself a "brown envelope" journalist characteristic of his current employer, has by this stupid comments done more damage to Achebe's memory, grouping him with the likes of Rotimi, Okigbo, Osofisan and excluding the most prominent of these literary giants; what does that say of his logic? Should he, a coward, be brave enough, he should mention the suspected name and face the invocation of thunderous and fiery response. Enough on the lousy "egunje" journalist, he should henceforth be disregarded. The one with the "bushy hair" will remain our icon and hero.Iyke AjitonaSent from my IPadWho exactly is Tola Adeniyi attacking in the name of writing a tribute? What would have passed for a good tribute in the memory of Late Prof.Chinua Achebe, in my opionon sounds like a direct attack on somebody Tola Adeniyi cannot confront directly.Read and form your opinion.
Chinua Achebe: The uncrowned nobel laureate
By TOLA ADENIYI
The motto of Obafemi Awolowo University is ‘For Learning and Culture’. No one academic in Nigeria reflects and personifies that maxim more than Professor Chinua Achebe. The grandfather of modern English literature in Africa was both a colossus in learning, as he was a thoroughbred and highly cultivated individual in manners and character. Chinua Achebe’s transition last week took the world by storm and he was genuinely mourned by all those who appreciated the worth, both of his writings and his character. His passing on into eternity was a personal loss to this writer. It was in July 1965 that Uncle Segun Olusola took me to Chinua Achebe, somewhere on Broad Street, Lagos, to seek his permission for me to adapt his most celebrated classic, Things Fall Apart, published in 1958 into a play.
I had seen the dramatic elements in the novel and decided to make a drama out of it. Achebe asked me a few questions and satisfied with my answers, approved my proposal to adapt the novel for both stage and television. Ambali Sanni’s Muslim College, Ijebu Ode, provided the funds while the students made up the cast. The production was taken round the whole Western region, including Lagos (minus the colony) and was given loud applause by the likes of Derek Bullock and Dapo Adelugba. That was the beginning of the romance with this giant of letters, who, seven years later, hosted me and my wife on our honeymoon to his official residence at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, in 1972. Achebe gave pride to African writing and to Africans. For the first time, he provided a lens into Africa and presented Africa from the African perspective.
His writings were African-based but with monumental universal appeal. Hence his maiden novel Things Fall Apart got translated into well over 50 languages and sold over 12 million copies. Apart from being the greatest writer of prose to emerge from African continent, Achebe wrote for the masses. Achebe spoke so that he could be understood. The beauty of his writings was that he was a most excellent communicator, believing that the over all purpose of any work of art is communication. Your work, be it dance, song, speech, drama, gesture, painting must convey a message and that message must be comprehended by your listener, your viewer or your audience. Anything short of that is intellectual garbage. In fact, Achebe could easily pass for a playwright of immense stature.
There is so much drama in all of his novels. And this was the reason I started work on The Theatre in Achebe’s novels. All the characters in his writings are alive and touchable. The trees, the mountains, the rivers and valleys in his novels speak. Chinua Achebe gave dignity and personality to art. For him, you do not need to grow a bush on your head or grow rodents in your hair to impress on the world that you are an artist or a writer. Achebe was a man of character. He taught for many years at Nsukka and no one ever heard that he drove his female students nuts, nor was he ever accused of befriending or marrying his students. Achebe taught us what a great mind should be. Achebe never went round state governors with beggar’s bowl, soliciting for money or gratification nor was he ever accused of sleeping with his friends’ widows.
Twice Achebe was offered national honours. Twice he rejected them, arguing that he was not one that would pose as holy in the day time and be in cosy alliance in the night with people he accuses in the day time. The millions, who have continued to mourn Achebe since his transition, do so in deep sorrow and in sincerity, having discovered in the literary colossus a most genuine and sincere human being. Achebe identified with his Igbo nation. He shared the pains and sufferings of his people. And never for once did he treat them with condescension that he was in any way superior to his clan. Achebe was mature. He showed maturity in all his dealings. He did not exhibit childishness. He was never petty or small-minded. All those who had anything to do with him ended up respecting him because he commanded respect.
Even when he was in his thirties, he displayed unusual maturity and mastery of human relations. As far as Achebe was concerned, a writer or any artist for that matter was first and foremost a human person with deep human feelings and ethos. Chinua Achebe eminently qualified for a Nobel Prize before that hitherto prestigious prize got politicised and became not a reward for distinction but a reward for those, who had mastered the art and science of boardroom politics or global arm-twisting. Although Achebe mentioned lizard in almost all his works, the honourable man of letters never learnt the art of lizarding. Prose writer Chinua Achebe shared the distinction of being the best in their arts with John Pepper Clark and Christopher Okigbo, who, up till today, are the best writers of poetry, with Professor Ola Rotimi, the best in playwriting and play production, with Ene Henshaw, Wale Ogunyemi and Professor Femi Osofisan as playwrights with greatest relevance and profundity.
This explains why, to me, Achebe remains the uncrowned Nobel Prize winner with most authentic claim to that crown. The Federal Government of Nigeria must immediately commence the process of creating a national monument to immortalise this rare genius of both learning and character. Chinua Achebe was not just a writer; he was a distinguished writer with the best and noblest of human virtues. A non hypocrite. A non bully. Achebe was both a great ambassador of Africa and a true and respectable specimen of the finest humanity. •Do not submit your happiness to the whims and caprices of others…
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Tola Adeniyi’s tribute is Kongi implied. Recall, Kongi was partly, if not largely responsible for routing them from their abasha business ( messy undertakings). Some Awoist!
Dotun N. Salu
From: Omo...@yahoogroups.com [mailto:Omo...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Mobolaji Aluko
Sent: 26 March 2013 14:43
To: Akinyemi Onigbinde
Cc: topcrest topcrest; elombah daniel; Omo...@yahoogroups.com; NaijaP...@yahoogroups.com; naijaintellects; niger...@yahoogroups.com; Ra'ayi; USAAfrica Dialogue; Yan Arewa
Subject: [OmoOdua] Re: NigerianID | Bolaji Aluko Re: TOLA ADENIYI ON ACHEBE!!!
Akinyemi:
It will not be in the late departed Prof Achebe's interest if this issue were to degenerate into "Discuss (Compare and Contrast) the Literature, Life and Times of Soyinka and Achebe." It would be un-even because Soyinka is still here with us and can defend himself or still make changes as he or his Maker see fit.
The Tola Adeniyi angle is childishly jejune and ill-advised.
And there you have it.
Bolaji Aluko
On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 7:49 AM, Akinyemi Onigbinde <akinom...@yahoo.com> wrote:
Elonbo,
I hope you guys are not coming with your revisionism as history history,about,yet another Yoruba person,just because one Yoruba person who was a traitor,working hand-in-glove with a Soyinka hunter in those days when Nigeria's fate hung in the balance,only expressed his frustration,a frustration he has carried about for reasons best known to him and his discredited pedigree.Now,name one Nigeria President that Soyinka hobnobbed with in the night while pretending to be on the masses side in day time.You should also name one Nigeria head of state that has not been on the receiving end of Soyinja's vitriol.Oh,perhaps,he went to hobnob with Ojukwu as the civil war gathered storm to merit being jailed for some odd 28 months,most of which he spent in solitary conferment.Yet,he surely was a darling to Abacha,Tola Adeniyi'shero,to warrant his house in Abeokuta been petrol- bombed after having been chased into exile,like many of his compatriots in the NADECO struggle.Also,Soyinka,as a University teacher, was a night-time friend of Ladoke Akintola and Tafawa Balewa when he risked everything to invade a radio station to stop Akintola's propaganda,afternath of the rigging of election in Western region,precipitating what,today,is known as wetie.
As for his writings,if you ask me,those who should know and appreciate their quality,or otherwise have since spoken in his being awarded the Nobel Prize for literature.Thus,your being unable to access them may well be due to the obvious fact that Soyinka is a serious writer who can only enjoy the attention of serious readers.I can only hope you don't want to be a new neo-Tarzan in town,a role Chinwezu led others to play in the 80s,aftermath of Soyinka'sNobel prize for literature.In the ensuring debate the troika got a serious tearing apart by the lion himself
I think you will save Achebe a hit-back if you advice yourself to desist from a dangerous path of taking a side-kick at Wole Soyinka.Even Achebe,the departed story-teller, did not risk a direct confrontation with the master polemicist
Akinyemi Onigbinde
Sent from my iPad
On Mar 26, 2013, at 11:45, topcrest topcrest <topc...@yahoo.com> wrote:
.but as a secondary school student, I only managed to finish 'The Man Died', mainly because of it's historical narrative.
As for the rest of Soyinka's works....For all my love for Literature, (I chose Literature as an option both in Secondary and Tertiary) I had to force myself to read them as an undergraduate, just because they were written by the great Wole Soyinka.
Dan,
Surely that is not Soyinka's fault is it? Accessibility is a function of the reader not the writer IMHO. Alexander solzhenitsyn's Gulag Archipelago was incomprehensible to me when Father O'Conell introduced it to us as form 2 students. It remains a classic.
·
- Part I The Prison Industry, Ch. 1 "Arrest" (p13, The Gulag Archipelago, Collins 1974)
- Every man always has handy a dozen glib little reasons why he is right not to sacrifice himself.
Joe
From: elombah daniel <elsd...@yahoo.com>
To: Mobolaji Aluko <alu...@gmail.com>; "Omo...@yahoogroups.com" <Omo...@yahoogroups.com>
Cc: "NaijaP...@yahoogroups.com" <NaijaP...@yahoogroups.com>; naijaintellects <naijain...@googlegroups.com>; "niger...@yahoogroups.com" <niger...@yahoogroups.com>; Ra'ayi <Raay...@yahoogroups.com>; USAAfrica Dialogue <USAAfric...@googlegroups.com>; Yan Arewa <YanA...@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2013 10:33 AM
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Elonbo,I hope you guys are not coming with your revisionism as history history,about,yet another Yoruba person,just because one Yoruba person who was a traitor,working hand-in-glove with a Soyinka hunter in those days when Nigeria's fate hung in the balance,only expressed his frustration,a frustration he has carried about for reasons best known to him and his discredited pedigree.Now,name one Nigeria President that Soyinka hobnobbed with in the night while pretending to be on the masses side in day time.You should also name one Nigeria head of state that has not been on the receiving end of Soyinja's vitriol.Oh,perhaps,he went to hobnob with Ojukwu as the civil war gathered storm to merit being jailed for some odd 28 months,most of which he spent in solitary conferment.Yet,he surely was a darling to Abacha,Tola Adeniyi'shero,to warrant his house in Abeokuta been petrol- bombed after having been chased into exile,like many of his compatriots in the NADECO struggle.Also,Soyinka,as a University teacher, was a night-time friend of Ladoke Akintola and Tafawa Balewa when he risked everything to invade a radio station to stop Akintola's propaganda,afternath of the rigging of election in Western region,precipitating what,today,is known as wetie.As for his writings,if you ask me,those who should know and appreciate their quality,or otherwise have since spoken in his being awarded the Nobel Prize for literature.Thus,your being unable to access them may well be due to the obvious fact that Soyinka is a serious writer who can only enjoy the attention of serious readers.I can only hope you don't want to be a new neo-Tarzan in town,a role Chinwezu led others to play in the 80s,aftermath of Soyinka'sNobel prize for literature.In the ensuring debate the troika got a serious tearing apart by the lion himselfI think you will save Achebe a hit-back if you advice yourself to desist from a dangerous path of taking a side-kick at Wole Soyinka.Even Achebe,the departed story-teller, did not risk a direct confrontation with the master polemicistAkinyemi Onigbinde
Sent from my iPad
.but as a secondary school student, I only managed to finish 'The Man Died', mainly because of it's historical narrative.
As for the rest of Soyinka's works....For all my love for Literature, (I chose Literature as an option both in Secondary and Tertiary) I had to force myself to read them as an undergraduate, just because they were written by the great Wole Soyinka.
Dan,Surely that is not Soyinka's fault is it? Accessibility is a function of the reader not the writer IMHO. Alexander solzhenitsyn's Gulag Archipelago was incomprehensible to me when Father O'Conell introduced it to us as form 2 students. It remains a classic.
- Part I The Prison Industry, Ch. 1 "Arrest" (p13, The Gulag Archipelago, Collins 1974)
- Every man always has handy a dozen glib little reasons why he is right not to sacrifice himself.
Joe
Cc: "NaijaP...@yahoogroups.com" <NaijaP...@yahoogroups.com>; naijaintellects <naijain...@googlegroups.com>; "niger...@yahoogroups.com" <niger...@yahoogroups.com>; Ra'ayi <Raay...@yahoogroups.com>; USAAfrica Dialogue <USAAfric...@googlegroups.com>; Yan Arewa <YanA...@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2013 10:33 AM
Subject: NigerianID | Bolaji Aluko Re: TOLA ADENIYI ON ACHEBE!!!
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Tola Adeniyi makes it clear that his tribute was a personal one to Chinua Achebe- a man who was graciously kind to him as an artist and friend. He lays bare some of the many essences of Achebe’s difference and greatness not just as a very successful writer but more importantly as a true believer in the siblinghood of the human race. He gives the impression that for him, Achebe was a brainy and moral man which is indeed a lot to write about a man behind his back. His tribute reads to me more like a eulogy. Tola Adeniyi like many all over the enlightened world seems touched by Achebe’s passing.
I am struck by Tola Adeniyi’s ample praise of Achebe as a man of character and virtue. For him, character is as much a measure of a person’s greatness as is their intellectual accomplishments and esteem. For him, greatness, measured by service to others, is a lot more than impressive works of art, science, and technology. It is also about self-discipline, and respect for others especially the lowly and powerless. It is about not taking advantage of others. There may not be many who would seriously disagree with him. Tola Adeniyi’s tribute for me, is a call to deep reflection, action, and perhaps change. Tola Adeniyi deserves to be commended for his thoughtfulness, courage, and candor.
I am also struck by the vitriolic attacks on Tola Adeniyi by some who impute discontent with and grudge against an “unnamed” person in his Achebe tribute. I have some questions. Is there really such a one? Has Tola Adeniyi made any non-factual statements or written evident untruths? Has truth ceased to be justification for slander and libel? If Tola Adeniyi lied, his critics should fairly and round take him on them rather than crudely disparage him on the basis of presumptions and suppositions. I am not sure that the “unnamed” person whoever they are, would have need for any of Tola Adeniyi’s critics to defend them. They may not care. Achebe himself is reported to have said, if you do not like somebody’s book, write your own.
One other fact of Achebe’s fruitful life we may need to embrace is his rejection of the resort to verbal abuse and invectives in conversation and debate.
oa
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CompcrosComparative Cognitive Processes and Systems"Exploring Every Corner of the Cosmos in Search of Knowledge"
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Tola Adeniyi is such a coward. At his age one feels he should be old enough to know better (but wisdom is to Solomon what age is to Methuselah ). The attack is in poor taste and reeks of bitterness and envy. Perhaps, it is Soyinka's fault not have hosted Deto Deni to a lavish honeymoon.
Bj
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BJ
“….The attack is in poor taste and reeks of bitterness and envy”
Poor taste, bitterness and envy. These things eat at the being of whomever they reside but, who cares.
Kongi dey KAMPE with wholesome omoluabi attributes.
Aba Saheed and shifting morals, till death do they part.
Enjoy your day
Dotun N. Salu
From: elombah daniel <elsd...@yahoo.com>
To: Mobolaji Aluko <alu...@gmail.com>; "Omo...@yahoogroups.com" <Omo...@yahoogroups.com>
Cc: "NaijaP...@yahoogroups.com" <NaijaP...@yahoogroups.com>; naijaintellects <naijain...@googlegroups.com>; "niger...@yahoogroups.com" <niger...@yahoogroups.com>; Ra'ayi <Raay...@yahoogroups.com>; USAAfrica Dialogue <USAAfric...@googlegroups.com>; Yan Arewa <YanA...@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2013 10:33 AM
Subject: NigerianID | Bolaji Aluko Re: TOLA ADENIYI ON ACHEBE!!!
My brothers,Chief Tola Adeniyi saw the truth, spoke the truth and wrote absolutely nothing but the truth...Yes, Wole Soyinka, we all love him, but somehow in our quiet moments, deep in our hearts, we just look at the man, his works, his attitude, his grandstanding, his writings and quietly wonder......I read Chinua Achebe as a primary school pupil.....but as a secondary school student, I only managed to finish 'The Man Died', mainly because of it's historical narrative.As for the rest of Soyinka's works....For all my love for Literature, (I chose Literature as an option both in Secondary and Tertiary) I had to force myself to read them as an undergraduate, just because they were written by the great Wole Soyinka.As for Soyinka's politics - wining and dining with all our former corrupt president's at night and pretending in the daytime to side with the masses, we also saw them, but still feel that his good sides outweigh his bad sides....after-all this is Nigeria, our Nigeria.....and yes we still respect Soyinka as Nigeria's worthy ambassador.....Soyinka is great, no doubt, but Achebe is a colossus!.....and if you Bolaji Aluko wrote, just last night that there is nothing wrong for some disgusting and animalistic low-lifes on this forum to lie and speak ill of the distinguished and honourable Achebe in death, (You last night urged "dear all" to speak the good the bad the ugly about Achebe) it is rampaging hypocrisy for you for you to disparage Chief Tola Adeniyi for saying the truth as he saw them.Daniel Elombah+44-7435469430
Every Nigerian that has something important to say, says it on http://www.elombah.com/
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